“DO YOU THINK ANDROIDS HAVE SOULS?”: FIRST EDITION OF DO ANDROIDS DREAM OF ELECTRIC SHEEP?
DICK, Philip K. Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? Garden City: Doubleday, 1968. Octavo, original gray cloth, original dust jacket. Housed in a custom clamshell box.
First edition of Dick’s masterful fusion of the detective and science fiction genres, a haunting meditation on empathy and identity and “a key novel in Dick’s canon,” the basis of the acclaimed film Blade Runner.
Philip K. Dick’s dramatic dystopia wrestles, as did much of his work, with the question, “What does it mean to be human in an era wherein human conjoins with machine, biology with technology, nature with manufacture?” (Jill Galvan, Science Fiction Studies 24:3). The book “has become Dick’s most widely read novel since it formed the basis of the fine science fiction movie Blade Runner in 1982. It is also one of his best” (Science Fiction 100 Best, 129). Several elements that did not survive the transition from page to screen—the titular artificial animals, for instance, or the messianic religion of Mercerism—mark the text as “one of Dick’s most tantalizing explorations of the human capacity for empathy” (New York Times). “A key novel in Dick’s canon” (Anatomy of Wonder II-326). Currey, 125.
Dust jacket with slight rubbing to edges. A nearly fine copy of a seminal science fiction classic, scarce in the first edition.